"I guess what you still haven't answered, though, is what is inaccurate in our reporting?" Cooper asked. "Because you said you weren't in the briefing, you don't know if what we're reporting is true or not. You weren't in the briefing. And I guess you haven't heard anything about what was in the briefing from anybody who was there. Can you deny that what we reported, not what BuzzFeed, all that unsubstantiated stuff, which we're not reporting, what we reported -- how can you say it's not true?"

"Sure, I can," Conway said. "Here's the answer -- if the four intelligence officials that gave the top secret briefing last week that some fools think they should leak to the media when it's a top secret intelligence briefing for a reason so that we're all protected, everybody, then why, according to your own report last night -- 'report' used as a loose word here -- why do they not tell the President-elect about it? Because your own reporting says that there's no confirmation that they briefed him orally."

Conway continued to insist that the CNN report linked to BuzzFeed's publishing of the 35-page document that had unsubstantiated memos. Cooper fact-checked her claim by reviewing the article on CNN.com.